Hornady Frontier Ammunition

Photos by Ben Battles and Hornady

Economical AR ammo without the inconsistencies

Hornady has recently introduced (actually reintroduced the name at least) line of affordable center-fire rifle ammunition under the Frontier brand. It’s manufactured from top-quality brass cases with annealed necks and shoulders and loaded with military grade boxer primers and propellants, making it fully reloadable. For now, at least, it’s only available in two chamberings: 5.56 NATO and .223 Rem.

As of press time, in .223 Rem. available bullets include 55-grain full metal jacket, 55-grain soft point, 55-grain hollow point match and 68-grain bobtail hollow point match to cover varmint, target and competition applications. Depending on the bullet type, Frontier .223 Rem. cartridges are available in boxes of 20, 150, 500 or 1,000 rounds.

Depending on the load, Hornady’s Frontier line of .223 Remington and 5.56x45mm NATO loads are available in quantities of 20, 50, 150, 200, 500 and 1,000-rounds. Bulk quantities will be the best value, but we’ve seen the 55-grain .223—arguably the most common range ammunition used in an AR—for just over 30-cents per round. That’s a lot of quality for a plinking-ammo price.

Hornady Frontier offers a wide variety of choices in 5.56 NATO as well. Again, it’s loaded in precision brass cases with annealed necks and shoulders and stoked with military grade boxer primers and propellants, and is also fully reloadable. Available bullets include 55-grain full metal jacket (very close to the US military’s M193 load), 55-grain hollow point match, 62-grain full metal jacket, 62-grain boattail hollow point match, 62-grain soft point, 62-grain full metal jacket, 68-grain boattail hollow point match and 75-grain boattail hollow point match. As with the .223 Rem., and depending on the bullet type, Frontier 5.56 NATO cartridges are also available in boxes of 20, 150, 500 or 1,000 rounds. Pricing was not available at press time.

As an aside, 5.56 NATO and .223 Rem. cartridges are very similar, but far from identical. The 5.56 NATO case has thicker walls to withstand higher pressures, which results in a reduced case capacity, and the leade is roughly twice as long as that of the .223 Rem. The leade of a barrel is the area in front of the chamber before where the rifling begins. .223 Rem. ammunition can be safely fired in a 5.56 NATO chamber, but not conversely. Some ARs are built with Wylde chambers—like those of Rock River arms and others—which can safely fire both .223 Rem. and 5.56 NATO rounds interchangeably. 5.56 NATO ammunition should never be fired in a rifle chambered only for .223 Rem.

Frontier bullets styles run the gamut from full-metal jacket, to spire-point, hollow-point match and boat-tail hollow-point match, so no matter what the purpose, Hornady has an economical solution to get you out shooting. Brass cases feature annealed necks and shoulders and are loaded with military grade boxer primers and propellants, making them fully reloadable.

Finding inexpensive range ammunition boasting this level of consistent performance is comparable to finding a high-end AR-15 for the price of an entry level rifle. Hornady has effectively brought economical, quality ammunition to the masses with the Frontier line by leveraging their Lake City Army Ammunition Plant assets, and we think they have something really great here. Pick up some of Hornady’s new Frontier ammunition at your gun shop, or for more information, contact Hornady Manufacturing; Tel.: (800) 338-3220; Web: www.hornady.com